Fort Recovery (1): Difference between revisions

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{{PageHeader}}
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{{SocialNetworks}}
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1793-1796) - Established in 1793 by Maj. [[Henry Burbank]] on the site of the 1791 St. Clair Massacre. Abandoned in 1796.
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1793-1796) - Established in 1793 by Maj. [[Henry Burbank]] on the site of the 1791 St. Clair Massacre. Abandoned in 1796.
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|- valign="top"
|width="50%"|[[Image:Fort Recovery Blockhouse - 1.jpg|300px|thumb|left|Fort Recovery Blockhouse]]
|width="50%"|[[Image:Fort Recovery Blockhouse - 1.jpg|350px|thumb|left|Fort Recovery Blockhouse]]
|width="50%"|[[Image:Fort Recovery - 34.jpg|300px|thumb|right|Fort Recovery Battles Monument]]
|width="50%"|[[Image:Fort Recovery - 34.jpg|350px|thumb|right|Fort Recovery Battles Monument]]
|-
|-
|colspan="2"|[[Image:Fort Recovery Stockade & Blockhouses.jpg|795px|thumb|center|Fort Recovery Stockade and Blockhouses]]
|colspan="2"|[[Image:Fort Recovery Stockade & Blockhouses.jpg|795px|thumb|center|Fort Recovery Stockade and Blockhouses]]
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== {{PAGENAME}} History ==
== [[Northwest Territory Indian War]] ==
[[Image:Fort Recovery - 11.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Fort Recovery Campaign Map Display]]
[[Image:Fort Recovery - 11.jpg|thumb|left|300px|Fort Recovery Campaign Map Display]]
Originally built as a rectangular palisaded fort with single story blockhouse bastions at each of the four corners. The 20' square blockhouses were later upgraded by adding a second story and a lookout cupola on top. One of a chain of forts built from [[Fort Washington]] to [[Fort Deposit]] to support General "Mad" [[Anthony Wayne]] and the campaign against northwest Indian tribes during the [[Northwest Territory Indian War]] (1785–1795).
{{WaynesForts}}


The fort was built on the 1791 site where General [[Arthur St. Clair]] suffered a major defeat that cost some 900 americans killed out of a force of about 1200. The disaster caused General Washington to force General St. Clair's resignation and he placed General "Mad" [[Anthony Wayne]] in charge of an elite force to finish the war.  
Fort Recovery was originally built in December 1793 as a rectangular palisaded fort with single-story blockhouse bastions at each of the four corners. The 20' square blockhouses were later upgraded by adding a second story and a lookout cupola on top.


In July 1794, Indians launched a night attack against Fort Recovery. The attack was repulsed by the American soldiers with twenty two soldiers lost in the battle. The Indians losses were forty dead and twenty wounded. This defeat discouraged the Indian tribes and led to a split in their confederation and a leadership change. General Wayne's decisive victory at the Battle of Fallen Timbers and the resulting Treaty of Greenville in 1795 ended the conflict.
The fort was built on the 1791 site where General [[Arthur St. Clair]] suffered a major defeat that cost some 900 Americans killed out of a force of about 1200. The disaster caused General Washington to force General St. Clair's resignation and he placed General "Mad" [[Anthony Wayne]] in charge of an elite force to finish the war.
 
In July 1794, Indians launched a night attack against Fort Recovery. The attack was repulsed by the American soldiers with twenty-two soldiers lost in the battle. The Indians' losses were forty dead and twenty wounded. This defeat discouraged the Indian tribes and led to a split in their confederation and a leadership change. General Wayne's decisive victory at the Battle of Fallen Timbers and the resulting Treaty of Green Ville in 1795 ended the conflict.


Fort Recovery was abandoned in 1796.
Fort Recovery was abandoned in 1796.
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== Current Status ==
== Current Status ==
Part of the Fort Recovery State Memorial. The Memorial Park has a partial reconstruction of one stockade wall, two blockhouses, a separate museum building, a period cabin and a blacksmith shop.
Part of the Fort Recovery State Memorial. The Memorial Park has a partial reconstruction of one stockade wall, two blockhouses, a separate museum building, a period cabin and a blacksmith shop.
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<googlemap version="0.9" lat="40.41379" lon="-84.777932" zoom="16" width="-500" height="-500" scale="yes" overview="yes" controls="large" icons="http://www.fortwiki.com/mapicons/icon{label}.png">
(F) 40.4141667, -84.7808333
(F) 40.4141667, -84.7808333, Fort Recovery (1)
Fort Recovery<br>(1793-1796)
(1793-1796)
(M) 40.413186, -84.775829
Monument
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{{Visited|6 Sep 2010}}
{{Visited|6 Sep 2010}}


=={{PAGENAME}} Picture Gallery==
{{PageFooter}}
{{PictureHead}}
<gallery>
</gallery>
 
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Recovery}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Recovery (1)}}
[[Category:All]]
[[Category:All]]
[[Category:Ohio All]]
[[Category:Ohio All]]
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[[Category:Ohio Mercer County]]
[[Category:Ohio Mercer County]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:State Memorial Park]]
[[Category:Northwest Territory Indian War Forts]]
[[Category:Starter Page]]
[[Category:Starter Page]]
[[Category:2010 Northern Trip]]
[[Category:2010 Northern Trip]]
[[Category:Reconstructed]]

Latest revision as of 20:20, 28 June 2020

Fort Recovery (1) (1793-1796) - Established in 1793 by Maj. Henry Burbank on the site of the 1791 St. Clair Massacre. Abandoned in 1796.

Fort Recovery Blockhouse
Fort Recovery Battles Monument
Fort Recovery Stockade and Blockhouses

Northwest Territory Indian War

Fort Recovery Campaign Map Display

In 1794 General "Mad" Anthony Wayne marched his troops toward the heart of the hostile Indian indian country near the present day city of Maumee, Ohio. Along the way, he carefully constructed a line of forts from Fort Washington to Fort Deposit as supply points and to secure communications and supply lines. The forts were about a day's march from each other. General Wayne was the third American general to attempt to control what had become a confederation of hostile Indian tribes with British support, he did not want to repeat the mistakes of his predecessors who both failed with horrific results.

Fort Recovery was originally built in December 1793 as a rectangular palisaded fort with single-story blockhouse bastions at each of the four corners. The 20' square blockhouses were later upgraded by adding a second story and a lookout cupola on top.

The fort was built on the 1791 site where General Arthur St. Clair suffered a major defeat that cost some 900 Americans killed out of a force of about 1200. The disaster caused General Washington to force General St. Clair's resignation and he placed General "Mad" Anthony Wayne in charge of an elite force to finish the war.

In July 1794, Indians launched a night attack against Fort Recovery. The attack was repulsed by the American soldiers with twenty-two soldiers lost in the battle. The Indians' losses were forty dead and twenty wounded. This defeat discouraged the Indian tribes and led to a split in their confederation and a leadership change. General Wayne's decisive victory at the Battle of Fallen Timbers and the resulting Treaty of Green Ville in 1795 ended the conflict.

Fort Recovery was abandoned in 1796.

Current Status

Part of the Fort Recovery State Memorial. The Memorial Park has a partial reconstruction of one stockade wall, two blockhouses, a separate museum building, a period cabin and a blacksmith shop.


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Location: Fort Recovery, Mercer County, Ohio.

Maps & Images

Lat: 40.4141667 Long: -84.7808333

Sources:

  • Roberts, Robert B., Encyclopedia of Historic Forts: The Military, Pioneer, and Trading Posts of the United States, Macmillan, New York, 1988, 10th printing, ISBN 0-02-926880-X, page 646

Links:

Visited: 6 Sep 2010